It takes more than a few tech geeks for a website to drive business.

It takes seasoned marketing intelligence to develop a branded website for business, a deep understanding of the competitive environment and how it works, experience in branding and marketing communications, and breakout creative backed by bulletproof web technology. We create websites that are frontline strategy against the competition.

We employ complex technology with one goal in mind. Simplicity.

Web development can be done in dozens of ways. We utilize leading edge standards to handle issues before they become issues. And, offer ongoing maintenance programs with an easy to use content management system for clients. Our ability to dovetail into corporate IT departments is a result of better in-house technological capabilities than other agencies our size.

We believe a company must have a unique online brand personality to survive. We utilize leading-edge media for the increasingly sophisticated audiences our clients need to influence. Our office is also experienced in collaboration and cooperation with corporate IT teams so we can dovetail seamlessly into your operation.

  • Responsive website design and development for business
  • User Interface and User Experience development
  • Email and newsletter marketing campaigns
  • Banner, search, listing and other Internet advertising
  • Native advertising & content placement
  • Interactive presentations and website enhancements

View our WEBSITES & DIGITAL page for detailed information.

Flying saucers over London show that communication and technology are different.

Technology changes so rapidly that if you don’t focus on the message you’re behind before you start. For example Pepsi Max has surprised commuters with their “unbelievable” augmented reality installation at a bus shelter on New Oxford Street in London. The intervention locates a special real-time display on the exterior face of a billboard wall, which visualizes a realistic augmented live stream of exaggerated events from the inside.  Unsuspecting bus passengers are terrified by a glass screen showing the street scene overlaid with apolcalyptic scenes of mayhem and destruction. From a giant robot crashing through the road’s brickwork to a passerby being abducted by flying saucers, the interactive experience creates unusual scenarios on the street, engaging the public for a publicity stunt. But will it make people drink Pepsi?

esqA past issue of Esquire featured the latest digital technology to dazzle advertisers and consumers alike, “augmented reality.” Its cover displayed a code designed to interact with PC-connected video cameras. The “augmented reality” offering features video clips, a music track and even an interactive marketing section. You can visit www.esquire.com/the-side/augmented-reality and experience the fusing of print and interactive and judge for yourself whether this will save print as we know it.

I love this technology. It’s new and fun and geeky—and like the James Cameron film, “Avatar”, which changed the way films are made—it’s amazing. However, for some reason it makes me think of 19th Century author Victor Hugo who probably never used the word “technology” in his life. He wrote his massive tomes, such as “Les Miserables”, by hand many times before publication; but somehow he communicated with such insight and power and relevance that when he died more than two million people took to the streets of Paris in a spontaneous show of respect. We all will have to decide what the difference between technology and communication is for ourselves before all human ideas become lost in the digital ecosystem.